The Vermont legislature passed a bill allowing physicians to approve
lethal drugs for terminally ill patients to kill themselves, a move the
local Catholic diocese said will have major consequences.
“Physician-assisted suicide will forever transform the role of physician
from one who preserves life to one who takes life,” the Catholic
Diocese of Burlington said ahead of the vote on its website.
“Catholics must raise their voices against such an affront to human
life,” the diocese added. “True compassion calls us to embrace those who
are dying, not provide them with the means to end their lives.”
On May 13, the Vermont House approved the bill by a vote of 75 to 65.
Last week, the Senate passed the bill by a vote of 16-14. Gov. Peter
Shumlin, a Democrat, has said he will sign the bill.
The bill allows the prescription of lethal drugs to patients suffering
from an “incurable and irreversible disease” and who have a life
expectancy of six months or less, Reuters reports. The patient’s primary
physician and a consulting doctor must agree that the patient’s
diagnosis is terminal and that the patient is capable of informed
consent.
The patient must request the drugs twice, with a 15-day period between the requests. The patient must self-administer the drugs.
Gov. Shumlin said the bill will offer the state’s citizens who have
terminal illnesses “a choice to control their destiny and avoid
unnecessary suffering.”
Opponents of the bill have said it could encourage people to kill
themselves out of fear they are imposing a burden on their family or out
of undue influence from potential heirs.
Bishop Salvatore R. Matano of Burlington spoke out against “doctor-prescribed suicide” in a letter reissued January 22.
“As we care for the child so must we care for all persons in the vast
spectrum of life,” the bishop said. “When we subjectively determine when
life begins and ends, when it is viable or not, when it is too
burdensome to endure, we begin a path toward self-destruction. Life is
no longer precious, but just another commodity in the business of
living.”
He warned that the legislation would allow health insurers and
government agencies to encourage the seriously ill to take lethal
prescriptions rather than seek life-extending treatment. He said at
least two such cases have become public in states where the form of
suicide is legal.
Bishop Matano urged that society provide support for the terminally ill.
Willfully killing those who are sick, disabled or dying is “morally
unacceptable and a tragic offense against life,” he said.
Doctor-assisted suicide is legal in Oregon and Washington state after
voters approved ballot initiatives in favor of legalization. Since the
Oregon law took effect in 1997, 673 people have killed themselves with
drugs prescribed under the law, the Oregon health department reported
earlier this year.
In 2012 Massachusetts voters narrowly defeated a ballot measure to legalize doctor-assisted suicide by a margin of 51-49.